Arsenic therapy for APLS-type autoimmune lymph-oproliferative syndrome in mice and humans

ABSTRACT

The invention relates to the use of an arsenic compound for the preparation of a medicament that is used to treat autoimmune diseases.

This application is a Divisional application of 10/512,430, filed Oct. 25, 2004, which is National Stage Application of PCT/FR03/01314, filed Apr. 25, 2003, which claims priority to French Application No. 02/05276, filed Apr. 26, 2002, the disclosures of each of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.

The invention relates to the use of arsenic for treating autoimmune diseases, in particular autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome.

The use of arsenic is already known for treating different types of cancers: leukemia, lymphoma, ovarian cancer, lung cancer.

Such treatments are described in documents FR 2 782 010, U.S. Pat. No. 6,333,028, FR 2 539 993, U.S. Pat. No. 6,191,123, EP 955 052, WO 99/24029, WO 99/18798 and WO 99/55344.

The use of arsenic for treating other diseases such as coccidioses, parasitic diseases, dermatomycoses or chronic asthenia syndrome is also known. These treatments are in particular described in documents FR 2 572 730, U.S. Pat. No. 5,550,153, WO 94/21249 and WO 95/01789.

However, the use of arsenic for treating autoimmune diseases is to date not known.

The term “autoimmunity” is intended to mean a state of immunization of an individual against itself. Autoimmune diseases are diseases of the immune system characterized by the production of antibodies (called autoantibodies) which react with antigens (called autoantigens) originating from the tissues of the actual patient (for review, see Schwartz et al (1984)). The most common autoimmune diseases are: systemic lupus erythematosus, acute disseminated lupus erythematosus, uveitis, Bechet's disease, sarcoidosis, Sjögren's syndrome, rheumatoid arthritis, juvenile arthritis, Fiessinger-Leroy-Reiter syndrome, gout, osteoarthrosis, polymyositis, myocarditis, primary biliary cirrhosis, Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, multiple sclerosis and other demyelinating diseases, aplastic anemia, essential thrombocytopenic purpura, any disease associated with a nontumoral lymphoproliferation, B-lymphocyte lymphoma, Simmonds' syndrome, Basedow-Graves disease and Graves' opthalmopathy, subacute thyroiditis and Hashimoto's disease, Addison's disease, chronic hepatitis, insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (type 1).

The medicinal products of the prior art that are used for treating autoimmune diseases, in particular systemic diseases, generally result in a nonspecific general suppression of the immune system. Most commonly, these medicinal products do not distinguish between the pathological immune response and a protective immune response of the organism. Thus, immunosuppressive medicinal products (for example: corticosteroid, azathioprine, cyclophosphamide and cyclosporine) are often administered in order to suppress the proliferation of autoreactive lymphocytes. Anti-inflammatory medicinal products are often prescribed for patients suffering from rheumatoid arthritis. Globally, these medicinal products have harmful side effects, the suppression of the immune response resulting in risk of infection and of cancer.

Insofar as the prior art is extremely rich in candidate substances capable of acting against such diseases, it is very difficult to pinpoint substances that are actually active in vivo and capable of treating autoimmune diseases.

The invention aims to overcome the drawbacks of the prior art by proposing effective compounds for the treatment and/or prevention of autoimmune diseases, with very reduced or completely absent unwanted side effects.

To this end, a subject of the invention, according to a first aspect, is the use of an arsenic compound for preparing a medicinal product for treating autoimmune diseases.

In particular, the abovementioned chosen diseases will be targeted.

Preferably, autoimmune diseases belonging to certain categories of metabolic disorder will be targeted, such as:

-   -   a deficiency in maintaining lymphoid organ homeostasis, of the         ALPS type;     -   a deficiency in maintaining liver homeostasis (hepatomegaly);     -   cutaneous diseases (lupus, psoriasis, etc.);     -   a defective apoptosis of proliferating cells of the liver, of         the skin;     -   a defective apoptosis of proliferating cells of the immune         system which can result, inter alia, in an overexpression of         FasL (autoimmune chronic hepatitis, etc.) or an abnormal         production of cytokines (rheumatoid arthritis, insulin-dependent         (autoimmune) diabetes mellitus, etc.).

The products of the present invention can also be used for treating graft-versus-host disease.

According to particularly preferred embodiments, the diseases to be treated are autoimmune lympho-proliferative syndrome (ALPS), lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis, Sjögren's syndrome, autoimmune chronic hepatitis and insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus.

In the present application, the term “arsenic” or “arsenic compound” or “arsenic derivative” will be used. This term is not limited to only the examples described; it encompasses the various forms of arsenic which have a preventive or curative effect on the target pathologies. In this sense, the present application describes in vivo tests which make it possible to screen for effective compounds, which exhibit biological activity results of at least 10, 20, 50, 80, 90, 100, 150, 200% of those obtained in the detailed description which follows using the arsenic As₂O₃.

Those skilled in the art having available to them these tests can therefore, without excessive effort, identify arsenic compounds that are therefore therapeutically effective in the context of the invention. Preference will in particular be given to an arsenic compound chosen from: As₂O₃, AS₄O₆, As₂S₂, As₂S₃, As₂S₅ and As₄S₄, most particularly As₂O₃. The candidate arsenic compounds can be preselected using suitable in vitro tests before being tested in vivo.

These arsenic compounds can be screened in order to measure their therapeutic effectiveness by means of an in vivo screening method comprising the administration of a candidate arsenic compound to animals suffering from an autoimmune disease, typically at a daily dose of the order of 5 to 10 mg/kg of bodyweight.

According to another aspect, the invention relates to a pharmaceutical composition intended for the treatment and/or prevention of at least one autoimmune disease, characterized in that it comprises an effective amount of an arsenic compound or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt of this compound. This effective amount intended to be administered daily is a dose of 3 to 10 mg/kg of bodyweight, preferably 5 to 10 mg/kg.

This composition may also comprise a pharmaceutically acceptable transporter or excipient. It is typically in a form that is suitable for oral or parenteral administration.

The term “pharmaceutically acceptable salt” refers to salts prepared from pharmaceutically acceptable nontoxic acids and bases, including inorganic and organic acids and bases. Use may in particular be made of an acid salt of sodium or of potassium, or an arsenic iodide.

Moreover, the invention relates to the use of compounds other than arsenic, but capable, just like arsenic, of inhibiting phosphatase activities, for treating autoimmune diseases.

The transporter may be of very varied type, according to the form of the preparation used for the administration, in particular oral or parenteral (lozenge, capsule, powder, intravenous injection, infusion).

For oral administration, the pharmaceutical preparation may be in liquid form, for example in solution, in the form of a syrup or of a suspension, or in the form of a powder intended to be redissolved. Such a liquid preparation can be prepared according to suitable techniques with pharmaceutically acceptable excipients such as suspending agents (for example: sorbitol, cellulose derivatives), emulsifiers (for example: lecithin or acacia), nonaqueous transporters (for example: fractionated vegetable oil), and preserving agents (for example: sorbic acid).

When solid oral preparations (lozenge, powder, capsule, tablet) are involved, the pharmaceutical compositions are prepared using suitable excipients such as binding agents (corn starch, polyvinyl pyrrolidone, hydroxypropylmethylcellulose), filling agents (lactose, microcrystalline cellulose), lubricants (magnesium stearate, talc, silica) or swelling agents (sodium lauryl sulfate).

For administration by inhalation, the compounds are typically included in a preparation of the aerosol type using a suitable gas.

The arsenic derivatives can also be formulated for parenteral administration, for example by continuous or noncontinuous injection. The liquid media are generally similar (water, glycol, oil, buffer) to those used for oral preparations.

The formulations by injection can be provided in the form of dosage units (ampoules, mini-containers) with a suitable protective agent. These compositions to be injected can also be in the form of a suspension, a solution or an emulsion and can contain stabilizers and/or dispersing agents. The active principle can also be prepared in the form of a powder with a suitable transporter. The invention also provides packs or kits comprising at least one container containing the arsenic derivative in a pharmaceutically acceptable form. For example, the arsenic may be in the form of a pharmaceutically acceptable solution, such as a saline solution, a dextrose solution or a sterile buffer solution; the kit may also comprise suitable means for injection, such as a sterile packaged syringe.

The therapeutic dose used in the treatment of autoimmune diseases is variable according to the seriousness and the conditions of treatment. The dose, and where appropriate the frequency, are to be adjusted as a function in particular of age and of bodyweight. Given the potential toxicity of the arsenic, the dosage and the duration of the treatment are determined in an appropriate manner, according to the seriousness of the disease and the long-lasting nature, or otherwise, of the recovery, it being possible for the treatment to last from a few days to a few months until complete or at least partial recovery is achieved. The formulation is typically administered daily, for a period of 10 to 50 days. Several successive treatments may be carried out, of the order of one month apart.

In addition, the arsenic may be administered, where appropriate, with other active principles that participate in the treatment of the targeted diseases. Thus, mention may be made of the use of the arsenic in combination with corticosteroids such as prednisone or drugs such as methotrexate, for treating autoimmune syndromes and/or chronic inflammatory pathologies.

According to another aspect, the invention relates to a method for treating autoimmune diseases, in particular in humans, comprising the administration to the patient of a pharmaceutically effective amount of an arsenic derivative. The invention relates to a method of treatment comprising the administration of 5 to 10 mg of arsenic per kilogram of bodyweight per day. The administration is typically oral or parenteral.

The effect of the treatment with the arsenic compounds on the autoimmune diseases studied can be monitored by means of suitable techniques as described in the examples hereinafter, in particular measuring the weight of the organs (nodes, spleen, etc.), studying the structure of the tissues (external study, anatomopathology).

The term “method of treatment” is intended to mean a curative or preventive treatment. The inventors have demonstrated the efficacy of the arsenic compounds for preventing the appearance of autoimmune diseases, as is described in the examples below.

Other subjects and advantages of the invention will emerge on reading the detailed description illustrated by means of the drawings in which:

FIGS. 1A and 1B show the recovery obtained by means of the arsenic on MRL/lpr mice, respectively the external morphology and the study of the skin of the neck by anatomopathology;

FIG. 2 shows the effect of the arsenic on MRL/lpr mice; on the left, untreated mouse with exophthalmia; on the right, treated mouse which has completely recovered;

FIG. 3 show sections of pulmonary tissue with substantial infiltrations by lymphoid cells around the vessels and bronchioles (control), and a normal pulmonary architecture (arsenic);

FIGS. 4A and 4B illustrate the return to normal anatomy of the internal organs due to the treatment with arsenic;

FIG. 5 represents the decrease in the percentage of CD4-CD8-B220+T lymphocytes due to the arsenic;

FIG. 6 show the decrease in the amount of cytokines and in the amount of membrane-bound FasL due to the arsenic;

FIG. 7 show the decrease, due to the arsenic, in the amount of autoantibodies in the form of immunocomplexes, accumulated in the kidney, and the infiltration of the kidney by cells of the immune system in the animals not treated with the arsenic;

FIG. 8 illustrates the disappearance of the abnormal titer of anti-DNA antibodies due to the arsenic: the anti-DNA antibodies are a characteristic of lupus in humans and MRL/lpr mice;

FIG. 9 illustrates the survival of the animals: all the control animals are dead after 4 months, all the treated animals are alive.

The inventors have studied mice referred to as MRL mice homozygous for the lpr mutation (MRL/lpr). Lymphoproliferation (lpr) results in an accumulation of activated T lymphocytes, of phenotype CD4⁺CD8⁻ or CD4⁻CD8⁺ which have escaped the process of negative regulation via the apoptotic pathway. Thus, in MRL/lpr mice, hypertrophy of lymph nodes occurs, the mass of which is 100 times greater than that of the lymph nodes of MRL+/+ mice, which are congenic for the lpr gene, and a spleen whose size is multiplied by 7 and a thymus whose weight, at the 22nd week, is double that of the MRL+/+ mice are observed. These activated T lymphocytes which accumulate will gradually repress the expression of their CD4 or CD8 receptors and become double-negative T lymphocytes having the phenotype: TCRαβCD4⁻ CD8⁻B220⁺, which will be responsible for the lymphoproliferation.

The MRL/lpr Mouse is a Spontaneous Model of Autoimmune Pathologies

The MRL/lpr mouse is in particular a spontaneous model of autoimmune diseases such as disseminated lupus erythematosus with the presence of erythematous lesions of the skin and of rheumatoid arthritis. This animal also exhibits Sjögren's syndrome characterized by the destruction of the salivary and lachrymal glands subsequent to an infiltration of lymphoid cells. These mice produce, as they age, a large quantity of autoantibodies which are responsible for a lethal glomerulonephritis due to immunocomplex deposits in the glomeruli of the kidney. Thus, the lifespan of the MRL/lpr mouse is considerably shortened compared with that of the MRL+/+ mouse: ˜4-5 months in the MRL/lpr mouse compared with ˜2 years in the MRL+/+ mouse. The congenic MRL+/+ mouse develops an attenuated form of glomerulonephritis but does not exhibit any lymphoproliferation; thus, the lpr mutation is thought to act as an accelerating factor in the occurrence of the lupus-related syndrome.

Arsenic Therapy for the Pathologies in the MRL/lpr Mouse

Initially, the inventors determined the optimum dose of arsenic (As₂O₃) to be injected into the MRL/lpr mice. Two concentrations were chosen: 1 and 5 μg of As₂O₃/g of mouse. At date T0, these injections were given daily. After one week of treatment, the group receiving the highest dose showed spectacular signs of improvement of the lupus-specific skin lesions, which was not the case for the mice treated at the lowest dose. Knowing that the MRL/lpr autoimmune mice die, on average, after 4 to 5 months, compared with the normal MRL+/+ mice which die after ˜2 years, the inventors decided to conserve, for the subsequent treatments, only the dose of 5 μg/g of mice. The control MRL+/+ mice having received this dose of arsenic exhibit, at T0+5 months, no sign of treatment-related pathologies.

From the end of the first week of treatment, the inventors formed 5 groups of animals:

-   -   1st group, aimed at the curative treatment of an already present         pathology,     -   2nd group, aimed at preventing the appearance of pathologies,     -   3rd group, aimed at determining the lifespan of the treated         animals,     -   4th group, aimed at determining the dose effect,     -   5th group, amimed at evaluating the effect of stopping the         treatment.

Each of the five groups has its controls consisting in injecting the dilution buffer for the arsenic. In addition, the animals present in the control and treated groups are derived from the same litter, which makes it possible to obtain reliable comparisons. At T0+5 months, more than 60 mice (MRL/lpr and MRL+/+) are undergoing treatment.

Results for Group 1

This study is aimed at the curative treatment of an already present pathology.

A) Study of Skin Lesions

As early as the end of the first month of treatment, the MRL/lpr mice showed a complete disappearance of the lupus-related skin lesions (FIG. 1) and a spectacular decrease in the exophthalmia characteristic of the pathology of the MRL/lpr mouse (FIG. 2). From this date, other treated and nontreated groups were formed and the groups treated with the As₂O₃ systematically showed a disappearance of the exophthalmia and of the skin problems. In addition, by means of anatomopathological studies of the skin (FIG. 1B), complete disappearance of the pathological tissue was confirmed in the MRL/lpr mice treated with the As₂O₃, but not in the control MRL/lpr animals. This arsenic treatment is therefore effective for treating the skin lesions related to an autoimmune pathology such as lupus.

In parallel with these studies on the skin, other organs that are targets for autoimmune pathologies, such as the kidney, the lung, the liver, the eye, etc., were removed and analyzed by anatomopathology. In addition, these various organs, along with the spleen, the lymph nodes and the thymus, were weighed. The results are given in table 1. In summary, the arsenic treatment returns the following organs to a normal weight, comparable to that of the organs of the MRL++ mouse: lymph nodes, spleen and liver. It should be noted that the action of this agent is targeted to the lymphoid organs and the liver, in the knowledge that the MRL/lpr mouse exhibits anomalies of lymphoid organ and liver homeostasis.

TABLE 1 Organ weight in grams MRL/lpr MRL/lpr MRL+/+ MRL+/+ MRL+/+ MRL/lpr MRL/lpr MRL/lpr *treatment *treatment control Arsenic Arsenic control Arsenic Arsenic stopped stopped Axillary 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.38 0.01 0.02 0.38 0.15 nodes Mesenteric 0.03 0.05 0.03 2.61 0.05 0.05 1.97 1.03 nodes Spleen 0.09 0.10 0.15 0.53 0.13 0.17 0.41 0.20 Liver 2.46 2.40 2.45 3.30 2.58 2.89 3.21 3.12 2 lungs 0.35 0.32 0.30 0.69 0.33 0.40 0.51 0.50 Kidney 0.47 0.44 0.44 0.44 0.52 0.53 0.55 0.55 Heart 0.21 0.22 0.22 0.29 0.20 0.25 0.29 0.26 *Treatment stopped: MRL/lpr mouse treated with arsenic for two months Treatment then stopped for a period of two months before sacrificing the animal

In addition, it should be noted that, in severe forms of disseminated lupus erythematosus, the patients exhibit a considerable inflammation of the lung with substantial infiltrations by lymphoid cells. The autoimmune MRL/lpr mice exhibit the same symptoms with, around the vessels and the bronchioles, substantial infiltrations by lymphoid cells (FIG. 3A, control). On the other hand, the mice treated with As₂O₃ have a normal pulmonary architecture with only a few lymphoid cells around the vessels and none around the bronchioles (FIG. 3A, arsenic).

B) Study of the Lymphoproliferation

After 1 month and 20 days of treatment, a group of 3 control MRL/lpr mice and a group of 3 treated MRL/lpr mice were sacrificed in order to evaluate the effectiveness of the treatment on the lympho-proliferation. The organs analyzed were the thymus, the spleen and the lymph nodes. FIG. 4 illustrates the spectacular decrease in the size of the spleen and of that of one of the mesenteric nodes. The phenotype of the lymphoid populations present in this spleen and this node was determined by flow cytometry. In summary, the arsenic treatment induces a disappearance of the lymphoproliferation due to the virtually complete elimination of the population of double-negative T lymphocytes, of phenotype TCRαβCD4⁺CD8⁻B220⁺, responsible for the lymphoproliferation. In addition, this cell population of abnormal phenotype is replaced with T lymphocytes of normal phenotype CD4⁺CD8⁻ and CD4⁻CD8⁺ (FIG. 5). However, the level of reduction of the number of these double-negative T cells depends on the duration of the treatment. Thus, a treatment of three months makes it possible to eliminate all the double-negative T cells.

In addition, the autoimmune MRL/lpr mice exhibit a high production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and of death cytokines such as alpha-IFN and gamma-IFN, IL-18, TNF-alpha and soluble FasL, unlike the normal MRL+/+ mice. Treatment of these autoimmune MRL/lpr mice with arsenic returns the amount of cytokines to a normal level, like that observed in the normal MRL+/+ mice. This decrease in the amount of cytokines and in the amount of soluble membrane FasL (FIG. 6) is related to the elimination of the activated T lymphocytes which are responsible for the lymphoproliferation.

In addition, disseminated lupus erythematosus and rheumatoid arthritis are characterized by the presence of high titers of serum autoantibodies. In the autoimmune MRL/lpr mice, these autoantibodies accumulate in the kidney in the form of immunocomplexes (FIG. 7, control B, arrows) and are responsible for glomerulonephritis which results in the death of the mice in 4 to 5 months. Treatment of the MRL/lpr mice with arsenic decreases by 60 to 70% the autoantibody titer (anti-double-stranded DNA IgG). This decrease in the autoantibody titer results in an absence of immunocomplexes in the kidney (FIG. 7, arsenic B), a significant reduction in the glomerulonephritis, and an increase in survival. In addition, the mice treated with arsenic do not shown any infiltration of the kidney by cells of the immune system (FIG. 7, arsenic A) compared with the untreated animals (FIG. 7, control A, arrows).

In conclusion, all the results obtained with group 1 show that arsenic is an effective treatment for eliminating the activated T lymphocytes responsible in the MRL/lpr mouse for the autoimmune lympho-proliferative syndrome (FIG. 8). In fact, arsenic is effective for treating the disseminated lupus erythematosus-related skin lesions in the MRL/lpr mouse. Arsenic is also an effective treatment for reducing the amount of cytokines in the MRL/lpr mouse, and also for treating the glomerulonephritis in the MRL/lpr mouse by reducing the autoantibody titer.

B) Study of the Evolution of Glucose Levels

5-Month-old female NOD (non obese diabetic) mice, which were developing the first symptoms of diabetes, were treated for 2 months with arsenic. The evolution of the pathology was evaluated by measuring the amount of glucose in the urine. Only the NOD mice treated with arsenic showed a normal glucose level in the urine.

Results for Group 2

This study is aimed at preventing the appearance of the pathologies.

The aim of this group of animals, which was begun at T0, is to evaluate the preventive effect of an arsenic treatment on the development of the lymphoproliferation and of the autoimmune pathologies. To do this, 4 groups of animals 1.5 months old were formed. Two of these groups consist of MRL/lpr mice and the other two groups consist of MRL+/+ mice. One MRL/lpr group and one MRL+/+ group were treated with 5 μg of arsenic per gram of mouse, and the other two control groups were treated with the dilution buffer for the arsenic. At T0+1 month, animals from each group were sacrificed. The organs analyzed were the thymus, the spleen, the lymph nodes, the skin, the liver, the kidney and the heart. A virtually complete absence of the lymphoproliferation was observed in the MRL/lpr mice treated with arsenic; in these animals, the non-lymphoid organs such as the heart or the kidney were not modified by the treatment. The arsenic therefore has a preventive effect on the development of the lymphoproliferation. The phenotype of the lymphoid populations present in this spleen and this node was determined by flow cytometry. As for the results for group 1, the arsenic makes it possible to eliminate the population of double-negative T cells which accumulate as the MRL/lpr mouse ages. In addition, the organs of these treated mice have a normal weight; there is therefore neither the lympho-proliferation nor the hepatomegaly that are observed in the control mice. The liver, the spleen, a lymph node, an eye, etc., were removed in order to be analyzed by anatomopathology.

Results for Group 3

This study is aimed at determining the lifespan of the treated animals. This experiment was begun at T0, and very sick MRL/lpr mice were treated either with arsenic or with the dilution buffer for the arsenic. At date T0+14 weeks, 100% of the treated MRL/lpr mice are alive, whereas 100% of the control MRL/lpr mice, which were not treated, are dead. In addition, after 35 weeks of treatment, the MRL/lpr mice are still alive with no signs of lymphoproliferation or of autoimmune pathologies (FIG. 9).

In addition, lethally irradiated MRL+/+ mice had their bone marrow reconstituted with bone marrow from MRL/lpr mice (MRL/lpr→MRL+/+ chimeras) or with bone marrow from MRL+/+ mice (MRL+/+→MRL+/+ chimeras) as a control. After reconstitution, the chimeras are treated with arsenic or are not treated. While 100% of the untreated MRL/lpr→MRL+/+ chimeras died of a graft-versus-host (GvH) reaction two weeks after the transplant, the chimeras treated with arsenic were alive. The arsenic is therefore effective against GvH and makes it possible to spectacularly increase the survival of the animals.

Results for Group 4

This study is aimed at determining the dose effect.

It is desirable to determine very precisely the preventive and curative effect of various doses of arsenic on the evolution of the pathologies developed by the MRL/lpr mice. Five groups of animals (MRL/lpr and MRL+/+) were treated with the following concentrations: 2.5, 5, 7.5, 10 and 15 μg/g of mouse.

The dose of 15 μg/g of mouse proved to be lethal in a few days for the curative treatment. For the preventive treatment, the dose is also very toxic and the animals died after two months. The dose of 2.5 μg/g of mouse is not sufficiently effective for the curative treatment in view of the skin lesions and of the size of the nodes visible from the outside of the animal (and as observed after opening the animal). The concentrations of 5, 7.5 and 10 μg/g result in complete disappearance of skin lesions. The complete curative effect was confirmed on the various organs studied. The lowest effective dose (5 μg/g for the mouse) of arsenic is preferably used in order to avoid any risk of toxicity.

Results for Group 5

This study is aimed at evaluating the effect of the treatment being stopped.

Some of the animals from group 1, for which the skin lesions had completely disappeared and whose sisters that had been sacrificed had shown a complete recovery, had their treatment gradually stopped over two weeks. After the treatment had been stopped for three months, these animals exhibited the skin pathologies characteristic of lupus, and a reappearance of the lymphoproliferation and of the hepatomegaly (table 1). These results indicate that, at least for a homozygous mutation, as in the case of the MRL/lpr mouse, the treatment cannot be definitively stopped. Insofar as the mutation is heterozygous in humans, the possibilities for treatment are increased.

All these results make it possible to confirm the effectiveness of an arsenic therapy for autoimmune diseases in humans. In addition, since those skilled in the art have some knowledge regarding arsenic therapy in humans for a particular form of leukemia, acute promyelocytic leukemia, and now, by virtue of the invention, also regarding the effective doses in mice, its use for the treatment of autoimmune diseases in humans, such as ALPS, does not pose any problems. Furthermore, this treatment is very advantageous since it is not expensive. 

The invention claimed is:
 1. A method for treating lupus erythematosus comprising administering to a patient in need thereof a therapeutically effective amount of an arsenic compound or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof, wherein the arsenic compound is selected from the group consisting of As₂O₃, As₄O₆, As₂S₂, As₂S₃, As₂S₅ and As₄S₄ and wherein the administration is oral or parenteral administration.
 2. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the arsenic compound is As₂O₃. 